Climate Letter #275

November 12, 2014

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Current cold wave explained.  It started with an immense typhoon that moved far to the north and disrupted the jetstream.  The effects could linger for two more weeks in much of the U.S.
There’s more to the story, making a connection to a possible long-term trend that got off to a big start last winter.  The very first image has unusual interest because of the placement of several truly extreme anomalies, meaning those that reach 30 degrees F or more.  The high one you see in the Arctic Ocean has been hanging around in that one place for a number of weeks, though not quite this extreme.
One more thing you might do that’s interesting is to open the reanalyzer site yourself, at  http://cci-reanalyzer.org/DailySummary/# and click over from the above image to the two that represent the southern hemisphere.  It’s a vastly different picture from what we see in the north, with much less anomaly and much cooler overall.  Note how Australia stands out from the rest and looks a bit uncomfortable, as summer approaches.
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How famers view climate change.  The results of the study are not surprising.  “Farmers are by necessity very focused on short-term weather, in-season decisions and managing immediate risks,” she said. “They’re thinking about when they can get in their field to do what they need to do, rather than looking 20 to 30 years down the road.”  I would like to add one more point.  Most of us are just one or two generations removed from living on a family farm ourselves.  We may very well have inherited an attitude that directs us to think in just the same way.  That fits with the wired-brain syndrome that George Marshall talks about in his recent book.  (CL# 263, 265.)
http://phys.org/news/2014-11-farmers-scientists-climate.html
Further recognition of the same phenomenon, applied to the recent elections:
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Some people have a totally different attitude.  These folks, who live on the front lines, have figured out what’s happening and are not in denial.  Will they gain an audience?
Carl

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